Nancy H. Adsit | |
---|---|
Born | Nancy H. Warren May 21, 1825 Palermo, New York, U.S. |
Died | April 27, 1902 Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. | (aged 76)
Resting place | Forest Home Cemetery, Milwaukee |
Pen name | Probus |
Occupation | art lecturer, art educator, writer |
Language | English |
Spouse |
Charles Davenport Adsit
(m. 1862; died 1873) |
Nancy H. Adsit (née, Warren; pen name, Probus; May 21, 1825 – April 27, 1902) was a 19th-century American art lecturer, art educator, and writer. A graduate of Ingham University, she contributed for half a century to art literature.[1] Adsit was the first woman to enter the insurance field in the United States, and, as far as is known, in the world. She was possessed of an unusual combination: great literary ability and excellent business sense. At the age of 13, she assumed charge of her own affairs and her future education. Some of her early writings aroused great antagonism, and her identity was withheld by her editor. It was not until many years later that she acknowledged their authorship. On the death of her husband, Charles Davenport Adsit, of Buffalo, New York in 1873, she assumed the entire charge of his business and general insurance agency. After a very successful career in this line, she sold the business and resumed her writing. She contributed to the London Art Journal, writing an interesting series of articles for them on "The Black and White in Art" or "Etching and Engraving". This brought demands for lectures and parlor talks on art, and she began a course of classes for study. For many years, she delivered these lectures in the principal cities of the U.S., and her name was prominently connected with art education both in the U.S. and abroad.[2] Adsit died in 1902.